DWAC-TV

"ABS-CBN Sports and Action-23" redirects here. the television network, see ABS-CBN Sports and Action.
This article is about the flagship defunct station of Studio 23 in Metro Manila
DWAC-TV (ABS-CBN Sports and Action Channel 23)
Metro Manila
City of license Quezon City
Branding ABS-CBN Sports and Action Channel 23
Slogan Play Hard
Channels Analog: 23 (UHF)
Digital: 43 (UHF)(ISDB-T)
Virtual: 11.17 (LCN)
Affiliations ABS-CBN Sports and Action
Owner ABS-CBN Corporation
Founded May 1992
Call letters' meaning DW
Arcadio Carandang
Sister station(s) DWWX-TV (ABS-CBN)
Former callsigns DZEE-TV (1992-1996)
Former affiliations Independent (1992-1996)
MTV Asia (1992-1994, 1996-2000)
Channel V (1994-1996)
Studio 23 (1996-2014)
Transmitter power 50 kW (10,000 kW ERP)
Website sports.abs-cbn.com

DWAC-TV, channel 23, is the flagship station of Philippine all-sports and action television network ABS-CBN Sports and Action, a fully owned subsidiary of ABS-CBN Corporation. Its studios and transmitter are located at ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center Mother Ignacia cor. Sgt. Esguerra Avenue, Diliman, Quezon City. It operates Saturday to Sunday from 5:00 AM to 12:00 AM, and the Monday to Friday 6:30 AM to 12:00 MN,

History

The station was acquired from Ermita Electronics Corporation in July 1996, which initially owned the frequency of the station that began airing in May 1992 from a densely populated commercial area in Quezon City with a rebroadcast of MTV Asia, then telecasting from the STAR TV platform. It was later showing Channel V refeeds from 1994 onwards as MTV made the decision to split from STAR and form its own satellite TV portal in Asia.

Just two years later in 1996, MTV Asia returned to the Philippine airwaves after establishing a new regional base in Singapore. ABS-CBN was picked as the broadcast arm of MTV Asia in the Philippines at the time, and Channel 23 started test broadcasts in September 1996 with rebroadcasts of the new MTV Asia from Singapore. A month later, it launched its own programming under the station name Studio 23 and adopted the slogan "Premium Television". The station initially ran MTV rebroadcasts in the day, and ran its own shows at primetime. It also ran for 24 hours, but financial limitations forced it to sign off at 3AM every day. That has been the broadcast arrangement ever since.

5 years later, MTV Asia acquired a new local UHF frequency and Studio 23 formally became a full station, adopting rebroadcasts of its in-house cable channel Myx to fill in the void left by MTV Asia, and came up with intensified programming led by the popular reality TV game show "Survivor", and several top rate US shows like "7th Heaven", "Will and Grace" and "Charmed", among others.

By 2004, the channel opened its doors to Taglish programs. It also by that time adopted a new slogan, "Kabarkada Mo!". Previous to this trend, the station was already running its own English newscast, "News Central", from 2001 to 2010, effectively replacing the network's "The World Tonight", previously on Channel 2 which had gone on to be a cable-only newscast of ANC, a cable channel of ABS-CBN. It also geared its mostly young viewers to trends in the tech world with "Digital World". With the intensified Taglish presence, Studio 23 today now has the nightly Tagalog gag newscast "Wazzup Wazzup", the interactive youth talk show "Y-Speak", and several others. It even provided support shows to its highly successful local reality programs "Pinoy Big Brother" and "Pinoy Dream Academy", both acquired from Endemol of the Netherlands and are big hits on Channel 2.

Expansion to sports programming

In 1998, ABS-CBN, through its sports division, ABS-CBN Sports, used mainly Studio 23 to highlight its own professional basketball league, the Metropolitan Basketball Association (MBA). The league adopted the home and away format used by the American professional league the National Basketball Association (NBA). (It however sold the franchise of the league after incurring heavy losses.) It marked the network's first serious foray into sports programming.

Later, that would be added by acquiring broadcast rights to the collegiate leagues UAAP and NCAA and the PBL.

Today, it carries a wide variety of local sporting competition, many of which involved neighborhood schools and showcasing budding Filipino sports talents.

Rebrand to ABS-CBN Sports+Action

Sports programming in Channel 23 was fully expanded with the launch of ABS-CBN Sports+Action in January 18, 2014, replacing Studio 23 for reason that the now-defunct channel is associative to its predominant entertainment content.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.